"Lady Luck" & Investing

"Lady Luck" & Investing
ABOVE THE MARKET May 1, 2013 By: Robert Seawright The self-serving bias is our tendency to see the good stuff that happens as our doing (“we had a great week of practice, worked really hard and executed on Sunday”) while the bad stuff is rarely our fault (“It just wasn’t our night” or “we simply couldn’t catch a break” or “we would have won if the refereeing hadn’t been so awful”). Thus desirable results are typically due to our skill and hard work — not luck — while lousy results are outside...

Read more >>

Central Banks Load Up On Equities

Central Banks Load Up On Equities
BLOOMBERG April 25, 2013 By: Sarah Jones [Streettalklive Note: From a purely logical standpoint such actions by Central Banks is unlikely to end well. While Central Bank buying is elevating prices in the short term through an effective "yeild chase" the eventual reversion in prices will likely be magnified.] Central banks, guardians of the world's $11 trillion in foreign-exchange reserves, are buying stocks in record amounts as falling bond yields push even risk- averse investors toward...

Read more >>

How To Be A "Real" Man

How To Be A "Real" Man
ABC NEWS April 25, 2013 By: Matthew Dowd Last week, in the midst of the search for the remaining Boston bombing suspect, I tweeted out a note saying I wished folks would come up with a different term than "manhunt" because the behavior and actions of the Tsarnaev brothers were anything but the acts of men. As I said, "real men don't harm innocents and real men don't disrespect or abuse women. Interestingly, it turns out Tamerlan Tsamaev was arrested previously for abuse, and had a history of...

Read more >>

Life In America: 1983 vs 2013

Life In America:  1983 vs 2013
TOP DEGREES ONLINE April 24, 2013 Much has changed in the last 30 years from tastes in music and movies to incomes and the type of employment. The infographic below shows the changes that we have experienced both as individuals and as an economy. Notice in particular, in the section related to employment, the shift from production and manufacturing jobs to service based jobs. The importance of this shift is the reduction in the "multiplier" effect of each dollar generated in the economy. ...

Read more >>

Earnings Flash Warning Sign

Earnings Flash Warning Sign
CNBC April 22, 2013 By: Jee Yeon Park Just two weeks into the first-quarter earnings season, a greater-than-usual number of companies have reported disappointing revenue results and tepid guidance, leading strategists to expect a more volatile time for stocks. "That is for sure not a formula for success against a weak economic backdrop over the last two weeks," said Art Hogan, managing director at Lazard Capital Markets, of the latest trend in corporate results. "We'll find out more in the next...

Read more >>

BEA Will Change The GDP Calculation To Boost Economy By 3% In July

BEA Will Change The GDP Calculation To Boost Economy By 3% In July
FINANCIAL TIMES April 22, 2013 By: Robin Harding StreettalkLive Note: The article represents the real problem with economic analysis and government reporting. Whether it is CPI, Employment or GDP the constant revisions, changes and recalculations to achieve better results (they never result in worse) negatively impacts the credibility of government reporting. While the changes to the GDP calculation certainly has a basis - the timing of the change, as economic weakness undermines policy rhetoric,...

Read more >>

Bubble To Bust To Bubble

Bubble To Bust To Bubble
DEALB%K April 19, 2013 By: Jesse Eisinger, Propublica Are we moving from the crash to the bubble, dispensing with that pesky economic recovery thing altogether? The Federal Reserve is well into its third round of "quantitative easing," in which it buys longer-term assets to bring down long-term lending rates. We are about five and a half years into the Fed's extraordinary monetary policies (its out-of-the-box lending programs began before the crash, in late 2007). The effect the central bank hopes...

Read more >>

Investment Hell

Investment Hell
ABOVE THE MARKET April 18, 2013 By: Robert Seawright According to the great Swiss theologian Karl Barth, hell is having your own way and being stuck with it. Investment hell is similar, except that there typically is a price at which escape is possible, if painful. Of course, we usually languish in investment hell far longer than we need to or should. And we must live with the consequences of our choices, intended or otherwise. Bernard of Clairvaux wrote that "L'enfer est plein de bonnes volontés...

Read more >>

Krugman's Data-Picking Downplays U.S. Debt

Krugman's Data-Picking Downplays U.S. Debt
COUNCIL ON FOREIGN RELATIONS April 18, 2013 By: Ben Steil Paul Krugman recently dismissed concerns about America's large international debt. "America's debtor position," he writes, "isn't actually that deep, because of capital gains." When Krugman talks about "America's debtor position" he is referring to the net international investment position (NIIP), which is the difference between the value of the U.S. portfolio of foreign assets and the value of the foreign portfolio of U.S. assets....

Read more >>

A Warning About "That Guy" Who Is Beating The Market

A Warning About "That Guy" Who Is Beating The Market
THE NEW YORK TIMES / BUCKS BLOG April 16, 2013 By: Carl Richards I'm sure I'm not alone in running into "that guy." You know, the guy who always seems to make the best investment decisions. I seem to run into him (and it's almost always a "him") everywhere: the neighborhood barbecue, the company party or even a family event. Maybe it's your co-worker or your brother-in-law. Based on the stories he tells you every time you run into him, making money in the stock market is easy. Picking the best...

Read more >>

StreetTalk On Air

recent commentary

Reports

Audio

Video

Fox 26: The Disconnect Between The Market & Economy

recommended reading

The Age of Deleveraging

the-age-of-deleveragingInvestment Strategies for a Decade of Slow Growth and Deflation

daily exchange archives